ABSTRACT

While inquiries into early encounters between East Asia and the West have traditionally focused on successful interactions, this collection inquires into the many forms of failure, experienced on all sides, in the period before 1850. Countering a tendency in scholarship to overlook unsuccessful encounters, it starts from the assumption that failures can prove highly illuminating and provide valuable insights into both the specific shapes and limitations of East Asian and Western imaginations of the Other, as well as of the nature of East-West interaction. Interdisciplinary in outlook, this collection brings together the perspectives of sinology, Japanese and Korean studies, historical studies, literary studies, art history, religious studies, and performance studies. The subjects discussed are manifold and range from missionary accounts, travel reports, letters and trade documents to fictional texts as well as material objects (such as tea, chinaware, or nautical instruments) exchanged between East and West. In order to avoid a Eurocentric perspective, the collection balances approaches from the fields of English literature, Spanish studies, Neo-Latin studies, and art history with those of sinology, Japanese studies, and Korean studies. It includes an introduction mapping out the field of failures in early modern encounters between East Asia and Europe, as well as a theoretically minded essay on the lessons of failure and the ethics of cross-cultural understanding.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

Telling Failures—Early Encounters between East Asia and Europe

part 1|39 pages

Trade

chapter 2|20 pages

A Failure Far from Heroic

Early European Encounters with ‘Far Eastern’ Slavery

chapter 3|19 pages

Faking It

The Invention of East Asia in Early Modern England

part 2|33 pages

Embassies

chapter 4|16 pages

The Travel Report of the Castilian Embassy to the Court of Tamerlane at Samarkand (1403–1406)

The Failed Response from Tamerlane to King Henry III of Castile and León

chapter 5|17 pages

The ‘Catastrophe of This New Chinese Mission’

The Amherst Embassy to China of 1816

part |37 pages

Religion

part 4|49 pages

Knowledge

chapter 8|19 pages

Persian Apples, Chinese Leaves, Arab Beans

Encounters with the East in Neo-Latin Didactic Poetry 1

chapter 10|16 pages

Lessons of Failure

Toward an Ethics of Cross-Cultural Understanding